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Hackers claiming to be from the ‘Cyber Caliphate’ also posted satellite images of US air bases on its Telegram account, but the same images could be found on Google Earth.

The United Cyber Caliphate has previously published similar lists, such as one in 2015 revealing the full names of 3,600 New York residents as well as their addresses underneath the headline: “We Want Them #Dead.”

The twisted online fanatics also reportedly hacked into US State Department records last year and released private information about 43 employees it wanted executed.

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Thousands of people have been placed on the cyber terrorists' kill list

In November 2015, the cyber jihadis leaked details of 54,000 Twitter accounts, including passwords, in a show of online power that sent shockwaves through social media.

According to a report by American intelligence firm Flashpoint, the United Cyber Caliphate was formed in April 2015 after a merger of several radical Islamic hacking groups.

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The secretive online jihadis allegedly hacked into US State Department records

But the report also revealed that the collective is “poorly organised”.

It is not known if there have already been any attacks on the individuals named on any of the terrorists’ lists.